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EVERTEC, Inc. (EVTC)

Q1 2025 Earnings Call· Sat, May 10, 2025

$30.02

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Transcript

Operator

Operator

Good day, everybody, and welcome to the EVERTEC First Quarter 2025 Earnings Call. All participants will be in a listen-only mode. [Operator Instructions] After today's presentation, there'll be an opportunity to ask questions. [Operator Instructions] Please note that today's event is being recorded. I would now like to turn the conference over to Beatriz Brown from Investor Relations. Please go ahead.

Beatriz Brown-Saenz

Analyst

Thank you, and good afternoon. With me today are Mac Schuessler, our President and Chief Executive Officer; and Joaquin Castrillo, our Chief Financial Officer. Before we begin, I would like to remind everyone that this call may contain forward-looking statements and should be considered in conjunction with cautionary statements contained in our earnings release and the company's most recent periodic SEC report. During today's call, management will provide certain information that will constitute non-GAAP financial measures under SEC rules, such as adjusted EBITDA, adjusted net income and adjusted earnings per common share. Reconciliations to GAAP measures and certain additional information are also included in today's earnings release and related supplemental slides, which are available in the Investor Relations section of our company website at www.evertecinc.com. I will now hand the call over to Mac.

Morgan Schuessler

Analyst

Thanks, Beatriz, and thanks to everyone for joining us today. I'm pleased to announce a strong start to 2025 for EVERTEC against what has become a backdrop of increased macro uncertainty. All of our business segments delivered strong growth over prior year and exceeded our internal expectations as we continue to execute at a very high level across all regions. On today's call, I will provide a brief summary of our first quarter financial results, a discussion of the Puerto Rico environment and the LatAm update. I will then turn the call over to Joaquin, who will provide some additional details on our Q1 results and our improved outlook for 2025. Starting on Slide 4, I'll cover some highlights from our first quarter results. Revenue for the quarter was $228.8 million, an 11.4% increase over the prior year as we saw growth across all of our segments. Currency represented a headwind in the quarter of approximately 3.3%. Adjusted EBITDA was $89.4 million, up approximately 14% year-over-year, and adjusted EBITDA margin was 39.1% for the quarter, up approximately 100 basis points from a year ago. The margin increase reflects the strong revenue performance and our continued focus on efficiency and expense management across the company, partially offset by the revenue mix in the quarter that includes more hardware and software sales coming in at lower margins. Adjusted EPS of $0.87 was up 21% year-over-year, driven by the strong adjusted EBITDA growth, lower interest expense and a lower share count. In the quarter, we generated approximately $37.6 million in operating cash flows and returned $3.2 million to shareholders through dividends. Our liquidity remains strong at approximately $460 million as of March 31. Let me now provide an update on Puerto Rico beginning on Slide 5. Merchant Acquiring grew 11% as we continue…

Joaquin Castrillo-Salgado

Analyst

Thank you, Mac, and good afternoon, everyone. Turning to Slide 8. I'll review the first quarter results for EVERTEC. Total revenue for the quarter was $228.8 million up approximately 11% compared to the prior year, reflecting strong organic growth across all of the company's segments and a small contribution from the 2 tuck-in acquisitions completed in the fourth quarter. Constant currency revenue growth was 15% in the quarter, with most of the headwind coming from the Brazilian real. Adjusted EBITDA for the quarter rose to $89.4 million, up approximately 14% from last year with a margin of 39.1%, an increase of 100 basis points. This growth resulted from strong revenue and a continued focus on expense management, partially offset by a mix shift toward lower margin areas within Business Solutions, mainly hardware and software sales. Adjusted net income was $56.3 million, an increase of approximately 17% year-over-year, driven primarily by the growth in adjusted EBITDA and a lower cash interest expense, which is a function of the lower sulfur rates in comparison to the prior year and the effect of the Term Loan B repricing efforts executed last year. The adjusted effective tax rate for the quarter was 5.3% and aligned with expectations. Adjusted EPS was $0.87, an increase of approximately 21% from the prior year, driven by the higher adjusted net income and the benefit from a reduced share count resulting from the repurchases completed during 2024. Moving to Slide 9. I will now cover our first quarter results by segment, beginning with Merchant Acquiring. Net revenue increased approximately 11% year-over-year to $47.6 million. as we benefited from a higher spread and sales volume growth. The positive spread continues to benefit from pricing initiatives implemented last year that were lapped in the latter part of the quarter, a slight…

Operator

Operator

[Operator Instructions] Our first question today comes from Vasu Govil from KBW.

Vasundhara Govil

Analyst

I guess first just on the revenue, strong revenue performance in this quarter. 15% constant currency growth is sort of one of the strongest I ever recall at the company given that most of it was organic. Joaquin, you said very small contribution from the 2 M&A deals. So just curious, relative to what your internal expectation was where you saw the outperformance come through? And sorry if I missed that, but it sounded like you're not incorporating anything from a macro standpoint at this point in time in the guide, is that correct?

Joaquin Castrillo-Salgado

Analyst

So what I would say, Vasu, is we really outperformed in pretty much every segment to what was our original expectation. I think if we look at Merchant Acquiring, we continue to see strong consumer confidence, and that came through in both volume and as we continue to see a tailwind in spread, Latin America continues to perform very well. As we said in the prepared remarks, Brazil's reacceleration is reflected now, right, in the performance that we're seeing in that segment. And obviously, as we move forward throughout the year, as we said, we do have some headwinds that we are expecting, mainly as we have some attrition that we mentioned in the past. And then in Business Solutions, we had some one-timers on hardware and software that really propped up that performance this past quarter. In terms of the second part of the question, what I would say is look, the low side does include or have some space for a degradation in consumer confidence as we move forward, but nothing drastic really. At this point, in the month of April, continues to look aligned to what were our expectations, but it's something that we will continue to monitor and that we've considered slightly within our guidance.

Vasundhara Govil

Analyst

And then, Mac, I have a more high-level strategic question for you, a little tricky, but I'll still ask. So it seems like M&A has really picked up in this space again. We've seen some big announcements in the last 2 to 3 weeks. So just curious how you think about EVERTEC positioning both as an acquirer of more sizable assets, but perhaps also as a potential strategic target?

Morgan Schuessler

Analyst

Yes. So what I would say is, look, we continue to focus on M&A. I mean we just did Grandata and Nubity. The M&A pipeline continues to be robust and full, and we're very excited about some of the assets that we're looking at. So that will continue to be an important part of our strategy. I mean I really don't opine on how other people view us from a strategic acquisition perspective. I do think what we're focused on is running the best business we can for our current investors. But like I said, we're pretty optimistic about our M&A pipeline.

Operator

Operator

Our next question will come from Cris Kennedy from William Blair.

Cristopher Kennedy

Analyst

It's good to hear about Brazil reaccelerating. Can you characterize kind of how the business is performing down there relative to prior, when you acquired that asset?

Morgan Schuessler

Analyst

Yes. So Cris, this is Mac. As you know, we won't break it out. I mean because we manage it as far as the LatAm segment. What I would tell you is at the beginning of last year, we were very focused on a leadership change, very focused on some very specific initiatives, getting close to the customer, making sure that we are modernizing the platform so that we could maintain their business, but also sort of change the contracts and reprice them so that we can get the benefit of their growth. And we're seeing the effect of all of that. So the growth is back within our expectations. We won't compare it to previous numbers, but we're very pleased with the performance of Brazil this quarter and are optimistic about the remainder of the year.

Cristopher Kennedy

Analyst

Great. And then just you gave a little bit of commentary on kind of the environment in Brazil and Chile. You gave great information on Puerto Rico. But when you think about your Latin American exposure, any countries from an economy standpoint kind of stand out that we should be monitoring?

Morgan Schuessler

Analyst

I mean nothing specific -- I mean, Brazil specifically, given that it's such a large piece of the business and given sort of the fluctuation we've seen in the currency under Luiz's administration. So that's the one that's the most significant where we've seen the biggest headwind from a currency perspective. As it relates to tariffs or any type of economic contraction, as Joaquin said, we haven't seen any type of meaningful impact today, and we're hopeful that, that will remain but we'll continue to monitor the situation around all the countries.

Operator

Operator

Our next question will come from Jamie Friedman with Susquehanna International.

James Friedman

Analyst

Nice results here. Mac, I wanted to ask you about the observations also about LatAm. You called out in your press release that you saw that the double-digit growth was driven in part by the GetNet Chile relationship and the reacceleration in Brazil. I was hoping you could unpack those a little bit. And at least in terms of GetNet Chile, where are you in the journey of delivering on that partnership?

Morgan Schuessler

Analyst

Yes. So like we said earlier, the segment grew double-digit organically. So we're very pleased with that. Grandata and Nubity were great at as well. And we're very pleased with the performance of both of those acquisitions. They're performing at, if not above our original expectations. When you think about GetNet getting at it is fully rolled out. So we've rolled out the capability for Santander, and they're now using that to enroll their merchants throughout Chile. So that is why you're seeing such a strong performance because they have been the most successful bank using our technology to move away from Transbank and that continues.

James Friedman

Analyst

So my recollection with GetNet, I might be being confused, but Chile was -- if I telling the story wrong, tell me, but it was originally a national issuer scheme and then it got privatized, GetNet took it away and you were participating in that. Do you have any data as to where that evolution is? How many cards are left? What the distribution in the market looks like? Anything that we can kind of drill in to come up with a size and opportunity for EVERTEC.

Morgan Schuessler

Analyst

Sure. So originally, and it's a great question, so for particularly those that are newer in the story. So Transbank used to be the primary acquirer across all of Chile. So all of the banks owned an equity stake in Transbank and they referred all their leads to Transbank and Transbank was the acquirer and processor for all of the merchants in the country. Santander was one of the first banks that decided to leave Transbank and create their own business. In addition, BCI did it with EVO, which is now part of Global Payments. In the marketplace, GetNet now has over 200,000 merchants that are active using our technology. So we believe we've been the most successful at helping them grow as they've chosen to leave Transbank. Across the country, I mean, Transbank has been rumored to be for sale for -- on many occasions. So I think it's created a lot of disruption for the original incumbent. And other banks in the region continue to look at alternatives, other banks in the country. So I mean, we're optimistic with our relationship with GetNet and the performance that we've seen, but we also believe that as there's more disruption, there may be more opportunities to process for other banks.

Operator

Operator

Our next question comes from John Davis with Raymond James.

John Davis

Analyst · Raymond James.

Joaquin, just wanted to touch on merchant margins for a second. I think they were up about 510 basis points year-over-year. I see in the slide deck, you talked about just spread driven top line growth and cost optimization, but hoping to dig in a little bit there? And also maybe get some color on how we should think about those margins trending throughout the rest of '25?

Joaquin Castrillo-Salgado

Analyst · Raymond James.

Sure. So I mean, look, as we've said, we have some -- a couple of different moving pieces when it comes to spread. Number one, we have some pricing actions that we're starting to lap towards the -- actually, we already lapped them. But for purposes of Q1, we did have a tailwind over the first couple of months. And we also have let's say, more card-not-present transactions, which are usually higher-yielding transactions. So that is also kind of driving a little bit the spread. And I would say, third, one of the main banks in Puerto Rico last year became a regulated bank. So that also decreases the total cost per transaction or, let's say, the amount of interchange that we need to pay on those transactions. So those 3 factors are, again, the main drivers of growth because it's price driven, it's very accretive and that's what's driven the margin up. The one thing I would say is given that we will lap most of these throughout the year the average ticket does continue to decline slightly, but it does continue to decline. So our expectation would be that if that is the case on a go-forward basis, that will start to put pressure again on the margin. So we're not expecting, let's say, margin expansion from where we are today in the Merchant segment.

John Davis

Analyst · Raymond James.

Okay. And then as we think about MercadoLibre and them rolling off. I'm not expecting exact answers here or numbers. But is second quarter going to be kind of a full run rate quarter of them being off? Or is it kind of a partial quarter, and we had a full quarter impact in 3Q, 4Q? Just trying to calibrate the models for their exit.

Joaquin Castrillo-Salgado

Analyst · Raymond James.

It won't be a full quarter, but it will take on, I would say, let's say, 2/3 of the quarter will be already impacted.

John Davis

Analyst · Raymond James.

Okay. So not much of a drop off from 2Q to 3Q then as we think about it. And then last one for me. I guess Mac or Joaquin, as we circle back to the hurricane money, relief money from, I guess, 7 or 8 years ago now. Obviously, you highlighted pretty healthy just general economic stats in Puerto Rico. Are you starting to see benefits from the relief funds? Is it something that you think should continue? Just curious kind of any update there would be helpful.

Joaquin Castrillo-Salgado

Analyst · Raymond James.

What I would say, John, is, yes, we continue to expect those funds to come through. I think that they have been, in fact, flowing through. And if you listen to some of the banks in Puerto Rico, they also are seeing more movement. How much of that or what the amount is going to impact any given year, I think it's still very hard to tell. But I think a lot of what's already coming in is getting reflected. And again, some of the resiliency that we're seeing in some of our payment segments in Puerto Rico. Actually, coming back to your previous question, John, to clarify, we did also call out, we have a few one-timers in the LatAm segment this quarter that in addition to, let's say, the attrition starting to show up over the next few quarters will also right not recur a portion of the top line we have in Q1 because it's onetime.

John Davis

Analyst · Raymond James.

Okay. Very helpful. Thanks, guys.

Joaquin Castrillo-Salgado

Analyst · Raymond James.

Thanks, John.

Operator

Operator

And that will conclude our question-and-answer session. I would now like to turn the conference back over to Mac Schuessler for any closing remarks.

Morgan Schuessler

Analyst

Again, I want to thank everyone for joining the call. I thank my colleagues for a great quarter, and we hope you have a great rest of your night.

Operator

Operator

Thank you very much. The conference has now concluded. Thank you, everybody, for attending today's presentation. You may now disconnect.